Issue 9, 2011

Rapid dissolution of ZnO nanocrystals in acidic cancer microenvironment leading to preferential apoptosis

Abstract

The microenvironment of cancer plays a very critical role in the survival, proliferation and drug resistance of solid tumors. Here, we report an interesting, acidic cancer microenvironment-mediated dissolution-induced preferential toxicity of ZnO nanocrystals (NCs) against cancer cells while leaving primary cells unaffected. Irrespective of the size-scale (5 and 200 nm) and surface chemistry differences (silica, starch or polyethylene glycol coating), ZnO NCs exhibited multiple stress mechanisms against cancer cell lines (IC50 ∼150 μM) while normal human primary cells (human dermal fibroblast, lymphocytes, human umbilical vein endothelial cells) remain less affected. Flow cytometry and confocal microscopy studies revealed that ZnO NCs undergo rapid preferential dissolution in acidic (pH ∼5–6) cancer microenvironment causing elevated ROS stress, mitochondrial superoxide formation, depolarization of mitochondrial membrane, and cell cycle arrest at S/G2 phase leading to apoptosis. In effect, by elucidating the unique toxicity mechanism of ZnO NCs, we show that ZnO NCs can destabilize cancer cells by utilizing its own hostile acidic microenvironment, which is otherwise critical for its survival.

Graphical abstract: Rapid dissolution of ZnO nanocrystals in acidic cancer microenvironment leading to preferential apoptosis

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Mar 2011
Accepted
02 Jun 2011
First published
08 Aug 2011

Nanoscale, 2011,3, 3657-3669

Rapid dissolution of ZnO nanocrystals in acidic cancer microenvironment leading to preferential apoptosis

A. Sasidharan, P. Chandran, D. Menon, S. Raman, S. Nair and M. Koyakutty, Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 3657 DOI: 10.1039/C1NR10272A

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